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Toronto Design Community Night celebrates creative excellence at King Living

“Design is about how we live together, how we create spaces that tell our stories.”

Photographer: Tyrone Steer

We drove down Castlefield Avenue as dusk settled over York. Inside 1400 Castlefield Avenue is the King Living showroom. Warm light spills onto the sidewalk like liquid amber, inviting passersby into a world where innovation meets intimacy. As I step through the glass doors, the scene unfolds like a carefully choreographed film: the air hums with anticipation, thick with the scent of wine mingling with vanilla bean from Elle Catering’s lobster risotto. 90s hip-hop basslines pulse softly beneath conversations, a nostalgic heartbeat uniting strangers.

Designers drift in, some in sharp monochrome, others draped in jewel-toned silks. A cluster of architects near the window gestures animatedly at modular sofas, their shadows dancing against steel frames. Near the bar, a Caribbean artist in vibrant Ankara print laughs with a Scandinavian minimalist, their contrasting styles creating a visual symphony. The space itself becomes a protagonist: award-winning sofas curve like sculptures under recessed lighting, while live-edge tables hold crystal glasses catching the last rays of sunset.

All the Graze’s charcuterie boards sprawl like edible landscapes: figs glistening beside prosciutto, local honey drizzled over aged cheddar. A bartender muddles mint for a cocktail, the lime zest perfumes the air. Guests trail fingers through velvet upholstery, testing resilience; others sink into Postureflex® seating systems, eyes closing in involuntary delight.

David King moves through the room like a quiet storm. His hands trace the steel frame of his suspension-inspired sofa. Nearby, a group debates sustainability: “Twenty-five-year warranties aren’t just guarantees,” insists an architect, “They are reparations for disposable culture.” Heads nod in agreement.

The music shifts. Laughter erupts, then applause. In that instant, geopolitics dissolve. This is Toronto, a microcosm of how design heals.

Outside, the city glitters. King Living’s vertical integration, those Thai factories, Australian ethics, Canadian dreams, suddenly feels less like logistics, more like love letters to permanence.

This night was more than networking. It was neural rewiring. When we sit in furniture engineered for generations, sip wine from vineyards older than nations, and dance to rhythms that survived the Middle Passages, we tap into something primal. We remember good design holds space for our histories while building room for our futures.

Leather journals clutched like treasures; guests linger. My photographer Tyrone Steer grips mine, and we walk away from the experience refreshed. It was a great night, and we are seeing how our African Caribbean designers are finding their way into settings that enhance their work, their creativity, their voices.

Toronto’s design renaissance is unfolding. Will you watch from the sidelines, or step into the frame? Join the conversation. Attend the next gathering. Meet other diverse designers. Share your story, because the most powerful designs begin when we decide to build together.

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